Signs of dyslexia in primary school children

If your child is primary school age and seems to be struggling with spelling, reading, writing or numeracy, that doesn’t mean they are dyslexic.

Not all dyslexic children display the same strengths and weaknesses at school, but the general signs of dyslexia at this age are:

  • Speed of processing: slow spoken and/or written language
  • Poor concentration
  • Difficulty following instructions
  • Forgetting words

They may struggle with written work, having messy handwriting, lots of crossing out, spelling mistakes throughout, poor pencil grip, or badly set out written work.

A dyslexic primary school child may show slow reading progress, pronouncing words wrong, no expression when reading, missing out words, and failing to recognise familiar words.

In maths, young dyslexic children might confuse symbols or find it difficult to remember anything in sequences such as days of the week, the alphabet, or times tables.
The child might find it hard to tell the time, know what day of the week it is or understand the concept of yesterday, today or tomorrow.

Dyslexic children can be dreamy, easily distracted, excessively tired, or even the class clown.

If all of this sounds familiar, you can find more signs and information here.

Source: Daily Express

You May Also Like

Breathe Your Way to Better Health: Simple Breathing Techniques to Alleviate Common Discomforts

How Breathing Techniques Can Transform Your Health. Do you often find yourself…

I Tried 5 Popular Water Bottles and Only One Was Worth the Hype

I wouldn’t believe it if you told me ten years ago that…

10 McDonald's Items Fans Want Back the Most, According to New Data

Like all other fast food restaurants, McDonald’s has been rotating items in…

Wingstop Giving Away 1 Million Free Tenders as Part of Crispy New Recipe Launch

Wingstop’s chicken tenders are about to get even and crispier and tastier,…